Weaponized Music: MTV and the NWO

May 7, 2010

'Music can be a unifying
force, it can be a
vehicle for cultural exchange, it brings people together and it also
elicits an
emotional response that sometimes is stronger than political leadership,
even
religious leadership.'by David Richards(for Henrymakow.com)I

[This article contains
highlights from an interview with MTV Chairman and CEO, Bill Roedy to Al Jazeera television,
broadcast April 5, 2008. Throughout the film, he reveals the political nature of
MTV, which reaches youth in 162 countries in 32 languages. Roedy is a former army ranger, involved in overseeing nuclear bases. ]

If you think the
culture creation industry exists solely to make money, perhaps this
comment by Bill
Roedy will change your mind. Asked why he left the military to pioneer
MTV, he
replied, 'I realised there was more
influence and power with television than with weapons.'

Odd. The goal of
warfare isn't to titillate our senses; rather it is the annihilation of
all
opposition.

Bill's military background is significant
because there is no record of him making a plausible
transition from the military to television. After leaving as a
decorated soldier, he moves straight to the top of MTV.From the onset he was using the
channel to make a political impact. He speaks about the fall of the Berlin wall:

'I joined inLate 88 or 89 and
there was tremendous sea change of political events happening in Eastern
Europe
culminating with the wall coming down in East Berlin. ...We were actually distributing in Eastern
Europe
[as] these changes were happening... I was invited to give a speech in East
Berlin
about East meets West and it just happened to be the same week the wall
came
down and we were going to a reception with the politburo attending and
great
celebration and they didn't attend. They all resigned and that was 24
hours of
when we hooked up MTV and we had this great picture of East German
soldiers on
the wall with an MTV umbrella.'

You were a NATO soldier but you
ended up standing on the wall while it was being torn down.
(Little smile) 'Yes there's tremendous irony in that...I've had these
privileges of being
in Eastern Europe with NATO at one point and then fast-forward twenty
years
later with television.'

When asked why he was
attracted to television Bill again makes no mention of business motives.

What made you gravitate towards MTV which
was a
very young channel at the time? It was disruptive technology, ...what made you think you had a career there?

'Well, I always loved television. The
power of
television, the power to reach mass groups of people and then if you do
it
right, connect.'

What is this power? He gives us the answer
when explaining how music is vital in the creation of a global
culture,

'Music can be a unifying force, it can be a
vehicle for cultural exchange, it brings people together and it also
elicits an
emotional response that sometimes is stronger than political leadership,
even
religious leadership.'

The natural target is the
young, who once mesmerised and programmed by the music permanently
change their culture. Bill is asked if the music he promotes is harmful,

'I think music by definition because it
relates
so strongly to young people is a little bit irreverent and therefore
adults
feel often unsettled with it. But I think the interesting thing about
Rock 'N'
Roll when it started it was very much that and people said 'O my gosh!'
and
obviously it seems very tame by today's standards, but the young people
growing
up then have kept music in their lives more than that generation.'

MTV changes indigenous cultures
by localizing their channels. During the interview he
repeatedly stresses the importance of localization:

'The
defining characteristic I believe of our culture at MTV Networks is to
respect
other cultures... 2 billion people
worldwide tune into the channel and we have this vertical connection
with them,
we're seen as a trusted voice.'

An example is MTV
Indonesia: '...we're very visible in the
Islamic world now, we've been in Indonesia now for many years, we have
call of
prayer on the channel in Indonesia 5 times a day and we do a portrayal
of
Ramadan in a youthful way so we have fun with it but we respect it of
course.'

And when you've created a gateway into some
exotic land, what do you do? You start modifying the
behaviour of the audience to suit political ends, say by promoting the
perils
of...

'Climate change has the potential to affect the
entire world. It's reached a tipping point more quickly than aids, it
took
years it seemed for it to be even covered by the media but the public
seems to
be ahead of the politicians and institutions on climate change...

but
behavioural
change is a challenge, I always say small pieces, with a network like
MTV with
almost 2 billion people small behavioural change on a large group of
people
equals a big thing, so if everyone turns their lights out it's equal to a
big
thing, so we can have an influence.'

From the sex
and violence in MTV videos, there is also an agenda to make traditional
values
obsolete. Take a recent video
by current superstar Lady Gaga called 'Telephone,' where almost naked
girls beat
and kiss each other in a lesbian prison. Are 12 year-olds demanding this
as
entertainment?

After viewing this pornography,
sorry,
music, and considering Roedy's comments, we can conclude that mass
entertainment is weaponized.

Comments for " Weaponized Music: MTV and the NWO"

Thanks for an excellent article. It reminds me of a study done by a local teenager on heavy metal music vs. Mozart and mice.

The purpose of the study was to determine the effects of music on mice navigating a maze.

For the first part of the study, the young scientist placed mice in an aquarium and blasted them with heavy metal music for 3 days. Result: they all killed each other.

After replacing his mice, he separated them. He compared mice with no music exposure to mice exposed to Heavy metal music and Mozart.

The study revealed that listening to Mozart increased the speed and efficiency of mice navigating the maze. However, the Heavy Metal exposed mice had greater difficulty and acted as if they were stoned on drugs.

Moral of the study: Heavy Metal music makes mice nasty, violent, and confused. And isn't that what the State wants us sheeple to be? Then they would have to come down hard on us, wouldn't they?

Thanks for that article on weaponised music. This theme for warfare was also exposed by the work of Dr. John Coleman for the intentional transformation of cultures by the cia/ni6 programs that he said came from the nazi mk ultra research coming out of the Tavistock Institute and a place called Wellington House. Music and drugs, blasphemies and sorcery were used for social engineering to change our culture from "Leave It To Beaver" to "Beevis and Butthead" and from Mother, God, Country and Apple Pie to Sex, Drugs and Rock 'n Roll in one generation.

May God bless continually the work of your hands.

Sincerely,

Michael-Jay

David said (May 8, 2010):

Henry, here is a write-up I did on the band Devo, an early MTV contributer, and their connections to the military: